HackerLangs
トップ新着トレンドコメント過去質問紹介求人

programmarchy

1,890 カルマ登録 14 年前

投稿

The State of Statefulness in AI Agents

twitter.com
1 ポイント·投稿者 programmarchy·2 か月前·0 コメント

コメント

programmarchy
·昨日·議論
Might have been Ken Silverman. https://advsys.net/ken
programmarchy
·8 日前·議論
Good luck with that. I used to be an OCD freak about code before LLMs, but AI coding has largely freed me of that limitation. I've become very comfortable giving AI a long leash, but only after being meticulous about curating the context.

These days I spend most of the day in discussions and planning, producing documentation, agonizing over architectural decisions, edge cases, and naming conventions. Once that's all settled I'll hand off implementation work to run overnight. In the morning, I'll review and fix, but I'm usually pleasantly surprised with the results.

One pitfall is long leash without a curated context, which is more like "slot machine" coding. Usually not effective, and may have addictive effects since it does occasionally work.

To spice things up lately, I've been encouraging the model to produce its own "capstone" -- a feature it decides to build on its own, however it wishes, with the tools at its disposal. So far it's been conservative, creating useful tools for development rather than customer facing features, but I'm curious to dial up the temperature to see what it might come up with.
programmarchy
·11 日前·議論
I haven’t used Effect but the problem I see with using it is that it seems to want to completely swallow the whole app architecture. At that point, why not just use a functional language?
programmarchy
·15 日前·議論
Railroads had enormous subsidies, too. This is how infrastructure is built, even in "capitalist" economies because it operates at the level of national security. Even to this day, passenger rail is not profitable, although freight is very profitable. So it wouldn't be surprising if "passenger" AI remains unprofitable, while "freight" AI becomes very profitable.

Pretty bold statement to say it's useless for most people outside of tech. Almost every "normal" person I know including my in-laws are using it regularly. It's becoming the go-to for asking questions rather than Google, Bing, etc.

And the privacy battle was lost 25 years ago. People don't really care if corporations know about their search history (Google), or their private lives (Facebook). You're beating a dead horse there.
programmarchy
·2 か月前·議論
AI might actually RTFM
programmarchy
·3 か月前·議論
Also had a severe issue with Bunny, serving videos. They had a cache poisoning issue where they served a few frames from pornographic videos right in the middle of our educational videos. They did not have the multi-tenancy thing fully figured out, and it became a nightmare scenario. After that, we moved to a provider that explicitly did not allow porn.
programmarchy
·3 か月前·議論
I really dislike how apps add themselves to the menubar. And I hate if there's no option to remove it from the menubar. Icons with indicators like WiFi, Battery, etc. make sense. But if an app does not need an indicator like that, just add the capabilities to the Dock icon!
programmarchy
·5 か月前·議論
Then what’s the point of skills like apple-reminders? Isn’t the implication for a personal assistant styled OpenClaw setup that you allow it access to those tools on your behalf? Otherwise where is the benefit?
programmarchy
·6 か月前·議論
FastAPI -> OpenAPI -> openapi-typescript
programmarchy
·7 か月前·議論
Academia is more than a transaction. It's a social good. One that's also subsidized by the US taxpayer.
programmarchy
·7 か月前·議論
Compile step makes things more complicated.
programmarchy
·9 か月前·議論
I spent some time attempting to "derive" a theme given a primary and secondary color, but realized my color theory wasn't strong enough to build something reliable (I tried with both hsl and oklch). Curious if that's really possible.
programmarchy
·9 か月前·議論
PDF is arguably a confusing format for LLMs to read.
programmarchy
·9 か月前·議論
Exactly what came to mind for me as well. Information is a difference that makes a difference.
programmarchy
·10 か月前·議論
An analogy

Statement: Statistically, seatbelts reduce the chances you’ll die in a car accident.

You: But, what if your car crashes into a lake and you get trapped underwater?
programmarchy
·5 年前·議論
There’s quite a few impressive fellows. Founder of Figma is probably one you’ve heard about.